NAME

fping - send ICMP ECHO_REQUEST packets to network hosts

SYNOPSIS

fping [ options ] [ systems... ]

DESCRIPTION

fping is a like program which uses the Internet Control Message
Protocol (ICMP) echo request to determine if a target host is
responding. fping differs from ping in that you can specify any number
of targets on the command line, or specify a file containing the lists
of targets to ping. Instead of sending to one target until it times out
or replies, fping will send out a ping packet and move on to the next
target in a round-robin fashion.
In the default mode, if a target replies, it is noted and removed from
the list of targets to check; if a target does not respond within a
certain time limit and/or retry limit it is designated as unreachable.
fping also supports sending a specified number of pings to a target, or
looping indefinitely (as in ping ).
Unlike ping , fping is meant to be used in scripts, so its output is
designed to be easy to parse.

OPTIONS

-a Show systems that are alive.
-A Display targets by address rather than DNS name.
-bn Number of bytes of ping data to send. The minimum size (normally
12) allows room for the data that fping needs to do its work
(sequence number, timestamp). The reported received data size
includes the IP header (normally 20 bytes) and ICMP header (8
bytes), so the minimum total size is 40 bytes. Default is 56, as
in ping. Maximum is the theoretical maximum IP datagram size
(64K), though most systems limit this to a smaller, system-
dependent number.
-Bn In the default mode, fping sends several requests to a target
before giving up, waiting longer for a reply on each successive
request. This parameter is the value by which the wait time is
multiplied on each successive request; it must be entered as a
floating-point number (x.y). The default is 1.5.
-c Number of request packets to send to each target. In this mode, a
line is displayed for each received response (this can suppressed
with -q or -Q). Also, statistics about responses for each target
are displayed when all requests have been sent (or when
interrupted).
-C Similar to -c, but the per-target statistics are displayed in a
format designed for automated response-time statistics gathering.
For example:
% fping -C 5 -q somehost
somehost : 91.7 37.0 29.2 - 36.8
shows the response time in milliseconds for each of the five
requests, with the "-" indicating that no response was received to
the fourth request.
-d Use DNS to lookup address of return ping packet. This allows you
to give fping a list of IP addresses as input and print hostnames
in the output.
-e Show elapsed (round-trip) time of packets.
-f Read list of targets from a file. This option can only be used by
the root user. Regular users should pipe in the file via stdin:
% fping < targets_file
-g Generate a target list from a supplied IP netmask, or a starting
and ending IP. Specify the netmask or start/end in the targets
portion of the command line.
ex. To ping the class C 192.168.1.x, the specified command line
could look like either:
fping -g 192.168.1.0/24
or
fping -g 192.168.1.0 192.168.1.255
-h Print usage message.
-in The minimum amount of time (in milliseconds) between sending a
ping packet to any target (default is 25).
-l Loop sending packets to each target indefinitely. Can be
interrupted with ctl-C; statistics about responses for each target
are then displayed.
-m Send pings to each of a target host’s multiple interfaces.
-n Same as -d.
-p In looping or counting modes (-l, -c, or -C), this parameter sets
the time in milliseconds that fping waits between successive
packets to an individual target. Default is 1000.
-q Quiet. Don’t show per-target results, just set final exit status.
-Qn Like -q, but show summary results every n seconds.
-rn Retry limit (default 3). This is the number of times an attempt at
pinging a target will be made, not including the first try.
-s Print cumulative statistics upon exit.
-Saddr
Set source address.
-tn Initial target timeout in milliseconds (default 500). In the
default mode, this is the amount of time that fping waits for a
response to its first request. Successive timeouts are multiplied
by the backoff factor.
-u Show targets that are unreachable.
-v Print fping version information.

EXAMPLES

The following perl script will check a list of hosts and send mail if
any are unreachable. It uses the open2 function which allows a program
to be opened for reading and writing. fping does not start pinging the
list of systems until it reads EOF, which it gets after INPUT is
closed. Sure the open2 usage is not needed in this example, but it’s a
good open2 example none the less.
#!/usr/bin/perl
require ’open2.pl’;
$MAILTO = "root";
$pid = &open2("OUTPUT","INPUT","/usr/local/bin/fping -u");
@check=("slapshot","foo","foobar");
foreach(@check) { print INPUT "$_\n"; }
close(INPUT);
@output=<OUTPUT>;
if ($#output != -1) {
chop($date=‘date‘);
open(MAIL,"|mail -s ’unreachable systems’ $MAILTO");
print MAIL "\nThe following systems are unreachable as of: $date\n\n";
print MAIL @output;
close MAIL;
}
Another good example is when you want to perform an action only on hosts
that are currently reachable.
#!/usr/bin/perl
$hosts_to_backup = ‘cat /etc/hosts.backup | fping -a‘;
foreach $host (split(/\n/,$hosts_to_backup)) {
# do it
}

DIAGNOSTICS

Exit status is 0 if all the hosts are reachable, 1 if some hosts were
unreachable, 2 if any IP addresses were not found, 3 for invalid
command line arguments, and 4 for a system call failure.

BUGS

Ha! If we knew of any we would have fixed them!

RESTRICTIONS

If certain options are used (i.e, a low value for -i and -t, and a high
value for -r) it is possible to flood the network. This program must be
installed as setuid root in order to open up a raw socket, or must be
run by root. In order to stop mere mortals from hosing the network
(when fping is installed setuid root) , normal users can’t specify the
following:
-i n where n < 10 msec
-r n where n > 20
-t n where n < 250 msec